Textron Employee Searches for Information on Modified Bedini Cole Window Motor

February 27th, 2007

The Textron user (host: srv5-1.dc1.textron.com, ip: 216.148.248.31) conducted the following Google search: modified bedini cole window motor

Hmm.

Someone from Textron, a company that received a U.S. Department of Defense grant to build a 100kW battlefield laser by 2009, is doing Google searches for information related to free energy machines…

I know. It’s just a bored employee on his lunch break…

9 Responses to “Textron Employee Searches for Information on Modified Bedini Cole Window Motor”

  1. […] If you’re wondering how They’re going to energize power cells, you’re not the only one! […]

  2. cryptogon_visitor says:

    Interesting. You track IP addresses?

  3. Kevin says:

    Of course:

    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe=off&rlz=1B2GGGL_enNZ177&q=site%3Acryptogon.com+host+ip&btnG=Search

    You can learn a lot by paying attention to what evil organizations are interested in.

  4. kermujin says:

    Holy crap! That list of visitors is *totally* creepy. DHS? USArmy? Office of the Secretary of Defense? US Navy?
    Jeepers. I’m utterly creeped out by the company. 🙂

  5. p says:

    Reearching topics by your referer logs has been known as “klebing” for many years in hacker slang:
    rot-13 url: uggc://jjj.jbbqznaa.pbz/senivn/frne1197.ugz

    Conversely, searching others’ logs for specific info is called ‘combing’.

    \\MOD: The URL referenced by the this user is http://www.woodmann.com/fravia/sear1197.htm -Kevin

  6. fallout11 says:

    I’m “zues.robins.af.mil”, but I don’t come in via Google. ^_^

  7. Zorkmid says:

    Think of it as your tax dollars at work! Thanks to the Islamic extremists and their terrorist games, the US Government has finished the second version of Eschelon, a cyber-driven search facility that can monitor the spectrum (10KHz to 3GHz), all land and satellite based telephone calls, cellular, PCS and now Internet activity! SMILE! You’re on NSA-camera!
    Should this surprise anyone?

  8. tim boucher says:

    I love the words in the title of this post.

    As to this stuff about military visitors (and pattern recognition in general), I’ve been on an interesting experiment lately where I have been doing a lot of writing aimed specifically at triggering spambot algorithms and while I was at the peak of doing this, I was getting more links per day from spamblogs than from “real” people. The point is, like attracts like. Write about the military, the military comes. Write about spam, spam becomes curious. I don’t necessarily know if there’s anything sinister to it. Maybe, but that may just be part of your own specific branch of newscodepoetry.

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